Culture and Our Emotions - (Key Issues in Modern Sociology) by E Doyle McCarthy
About this item
Highlights
- In the current global social landscape, emotions have become important in people's lives.
- About the Author: Doyle McCarthy is professor emerita of sociology and American studies at Fordham University, New York.
- 80 Pages
- Social Science, Sociology
Description
About the Book
In the current global social landscape, emotions have become important in people's lives. Doyle McCarthy, in Culture and Our Emotions, explains in highly accessible terms how this came about and how our lives have been changed in the process.
Book Synopsis
In the current global social landscape, emotions have become important in people's lives. Doyle McCarthy, in Culture and Our Emotions, explains in highly accessible terms how this came about and how our lives have been changed in the process.
Review Quotes
"Our Emotions and Culture: How Modern Life Changes Us is a brilliant book. Sociologist E Doyle McCarthy invites us to interrogate the intersection between self, society, and culture. She offers readers a sophisticated theoretical vocabulary to understand contemporary emotional life using excellent illustrations to contextualize her arguments. More importantly, she gives us an original perspective on why emotions matter to us more than ever." - Natalia Ruiz-Junco, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Sociology, Auburn University, USA
"The particular contributions of this book are articulating the social/cultural nature of emotions and emphasizing historical contexts and change. In so doing, it offers a deep challenge to our typical way of understanding emotions as conditions arising from within individuals. As described nicely in the conclusion, this understanding encourages us to understand the ways in which we are influenced by the surrounding culture." - Donileen R. Loseke, Professor Emerita, Department of Sociology, University of South Florida, USA
"With this book, E. Doyle McCarthy cements her standing as a critical guide to the emotional architecture emerging from capitalism's economy that permeates personal and cultural dramas. With conceptual clarity and brilliant examples, we can appreciate how emotions, meanings, and relationships are cultivated in present-day media culture engulfing identities, love, play, and politics." - David L. Altheide, Regents' Professor Emeritus, Arizona State University, USA
About the Author
Doyle McCarthy is professor emerita of sociology and American studies at Fordham University, New York. Her areas of research and writing include social theories of modernity, sociology of knowledge and emotion studies.